Suicide Blast Kills 24 At Pakistan Court
At Least 70 More Wounded In Lahore According To Officials, Witnesses
-
-
A Pakistani policeman and a civilian carry a wounded victim in the aftermath of a suicide bomb explosion Thursday Jan. 10, 2008, in Lahore, Pakistan. A suicide bomber blew himself up among police officers outside a court in eastern Pakistan Thursday, killing at least 24 people and wounding dozens of others minutes before a planned anti-government protest, officials and witnesses said. (AP Photo/K.M.Chaudhry)
-
Pakistani Police officers carry a wounded colleague in the aftermath of a suicide bomb explosion Thursday, Jan. 10, 2008 in Lahore, Pakistan. (AP Photo/K.M.Chaudary)
-
-
Photo Essay Pakistan Court Blast Attack on police at Lahore High Court was the latest to target the troubled nation's security forces.
-
Fast Facts Pakistan Learn about the people, economy and history.
The blast at Lahore High Court, minutes before a planned anti-government rally by lawyers, was a bloody reminder of the security threats facing this key U.S. ally ahead of Feb. 18 parliamentary elections.
Echoing an extremist tactic in Iraq, suicide attacks have become as commonplace in Pakistan as in neighboring Afghanistan, adding to rising pressures on President Pervez Musharraf as he struggles to stay in office eight years after seizing power in military coup.
At least 20 suicide bombers have struck the past three months in attacks that killed 400 people, many of them from the security forces - the most intense period of terror strikes here since Pakistan allied with the U.S. in its war against al Qaeda and other extremist groups in 2001.
Police said the attacker got into the midst of some 70 officers in riot gear and detonated explosives on his body, spewing shrapnel in a blast that sprawled mangled bodies in pools of blood. All but three of the dead were police officers.
A horse lay dead, still harnessed to a cart. An abandoned motorcycle was toppled in the street a few yards away. Police boots, riot shields and helmets littered the ground.
"There was a huge bang," said Munrian Bibi, 60, a school cleaner caught in the blast as she headed home from work. "I saw people falling on ground crying for help. I don't know what saved my life from that hell," she said in a hospital where she was treated for leg wounds.
There was no claim of responsibility. The government has blamed previous attacks on Islamic radicals allied with al Qaeda and the Taliban who are intent on expanding their reach from strongholds in Pakistan's lawless tribal region along the Afghan border.
Musharraf blamed the same militants for the Dec. 27 gun and suicide bomb attack that killed Bhutto, a secular former prime minister who had repeatedly pledged to battle Islamic extremism in this country of 160 million people.
Bhutto's supporters have questioned whether elements within the government may have had a role in the opposition leader's slaying after a campaign rally, and are demanding an independent U.N. investigation.
To allay critics, Musharraf last week invited British police to help investigate the attack. The small team of Scotland Yard investigators was in Lahore on Thursday to examine evidence stored at forensic laboratories, but that was far from the bombing site.
The attack in Lahore, which until Thursday had been spared the worst of Pakistan's rising violence, shattered windows and set off tear gas shells carried by the police, preventing people from getting close to the victims in the moments after the blast, witnesses said.
"A man rammed into our ranks and soon there was a huge explosion," said police officer Syed Imtiaz Hussain, who suffered wounds to his legs and groin. "I saw the bodies of other policemen burning. It was like hell."
The city police's chief investigator, Tasaddaq Hussain, said the mutilated head of the suicide bomber had been recovered and would be reconstructed for identification. The bomber's other body parts were being examined by forensic experts to extract DNA, he said.
"The bomber seems to be a young man who was wearing a track suit. He had a thin beard," Hussain said.
Police experts estimated the bomb contained up to 30 pounds of explosives.
The attack occurred about 15 minutes before lawyers planned to demonstrate in front of Lahore's courthouse as part of a nationwide protest movement against Musharraf for the November ouster of independent-minded Supreme Court judges who could have ended his rule.
Although it did not appear the lawyers were the target, the bombing could stifle further street protests and the willingness of Pakistanis to attend election rallies.
But Shamim Akhtar, secretary of the Lahore Bar Association, said the lawyers' struggle would continue. "Such cowardly acts cannot deter us from our struggle against authoritarian rule," he said.
I saw the bodies of other policemen burning. It was like hell.
Syed Imtiaz Hussain,police officer
"We are after them. We will get them. They are on the run," he told Dawn News TV.
“With such bloody violence taking place in Pakistan, there must be questions on security conditions as this country heads towards elections” one western diplomat told CBS News' Farhan Bokhari on condition of anonymity.
Late last month in Lahore, intelligence agents arrested a retired army major with alleged links to al Qaeda and linked him to a Nov. 1 bombing of an air force bus that killed eight people and wounded 40 in the town of Sargodha. It was not clear if that arrest, disclosed this week, was tied in any way to the courthouse bombing Thursday.
Musharraf condemned the latest bombing and reiterated his resolve to fight terrorism, saying he was "not to be deterred by such acts," the state news agency reported.
But Bhutto's husband and political heir, Asif Ali Zardari, said the attack was further proof the president had "miserably failed" to maintain law and order.
The attack came on the eve of the Islamic month of Muharram, which is often marred by bombings and clashes between Pakistan's Sunni Muslim majority and its Shiite minority. Authorities had already boosted security at holy sites across the country.
In the past 20 years, reports Bokhari, hardline Sunni Muslim groups have campaigned to officially have members of the Shiite sect declared heretics.
© MVIII, CBS Interactive Inc. All Rights Reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed. The Associated Press contributed to this report.
Best-selling author Mitch Albom on his first nonfiction work since "Tuesdays with Morrie."





- 1
- 2
- next
See all 22 Commentshttp://www.madcowprod.com/new_page_9.htm
He is at the table with Barry Seal...the infamous CIA drug dealer who, when he was assassinated, had VP George HW Bush''s private number in his possession.
Others at the table were Frank Sturgis and Felix Rodriguez...Watergate buglars who participated in the assassination of JFK...among other things...
http://home.highertech.net/~cdp/bushwar/bushwar0904b.htm
Terrorists! Murderers! Corruptionists! and Thieves!
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/07/10/AR2006071000307.html
Baseyev, the Chechen associated with many spectacular terrorists attacks on civilians in Russia was CIA trained.
http://www.rense.com/general57/rusbnlt.htm
http://www.globalresearch.ca/index.php?context=va&aid=7109
The Chechen terrorist leader Ilyas Akhmadov has received asylum and a stipend from the hypocritical terrorist supporting, terrorist ''fighters'' in Washington. This one is at the Endowment for Democracy--the Soros intelligence front...the big Obama supporter...
Posted by beachbird at 05:47 PM : Jan 10, 2008
Can you give me a time in the history of Islam since perhaps 650AD, when they committed suicide? This is a new intepretation of their religious craziness, not an established teaching given in the Koran. And keep in mind, Islamic campaigns have brough about invasions of countires many times over this time period. No, this is a manipulation of fools by their ignoable leaders, similar to the kamakazis of Japan when they were losing the war, though now they just lose their souls.
Posted by superdem at 10:13 AM : Jan 10, 2008
I sincerely doubt it, unless what they are destined to become is dead. But then, isn''t everyone eventually going to die? But they view is to die by taking as many innocents and infidels with them. Ours is more akin to die so that others may live.
They will never be peace in that region as long as people there believe in fantasy (religion). Religious-minded can''t be how a country is run. Look at what it''s done for them so far. The middle-east is the slum of the earth because of these people.
Why on earth do you defend these people and their actions? Is your hatred for Bush and America that extreme?
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Posted by cyinzl8r at 08:48 AM : Jan 10, 2008
+ report abuse
You''ve got to do better than that!! His post makes perfect sense and everything he posted is truth and all you can say is "******"? It''s childish and serves to help NO ONE... You do know that the poster is a combat veteran of MANY fights... Sounds to me like HE knows what he''s talking about and we already KNOW that Sir Lies-A-Lot doesn''t.
Posted by notblue at 09:35 AM : Jan 10, 2008
+ report abuse
The "Muslim Savages"? Why not call them what they are? Could it be that you are a bootlicker and afraid to admit that they are now rebuilt and as strong as when they attacked this nation? If we continue to listen to you "Stay the Course" types, there is little chance we will ever see peace in this part of the world.
Sounds like another al-CIA''da &/or al-Mossad''a linked operation. It has all of the hallmarks.
******
Ahhh? Would this be the same Taliban that we attacked over 6 years ago? Would this be the same Al Qaeda that ordered the attack on the WTC in 2001? Didn''t that piece of human trash that a few people call a President tell us they were defeated when he went after Iraq''s Oil? I''d like some of you fascist bootlickers out there to tell me exactly WHERE we are winning in this mess. We have 130,000 troops tied down in a nation that had NOTHING to do with the attack, we can''t or won''t go into the mountains of Pakistan to get the real enemy who Stupid let off the hook and we haven''t a friend in the world to help with the load on our already over streached military. If that''s winning, I''d sure as Helll hate to see LOSING!! Sieg Heil Bush!
So all were blind."
SearingTruth
A Future of the Brave - www.searingtruth.com
pale blue dot - Carl Sagan"
xraytwonine
Wow. Thank you so much xraytwonine.
ST
"One of the greatest tragedies of our existence is that we are a people united by so many common goals, but divided by so many uncommon beliefs.
I believe that our goals are more important. We all want to be free. We all want our children to be healthy and happy. Most all of us want peace so long as our own rights are protected.
These are the ideals that we can all strive for together. These are the threads of humanity that cannot be torn apart."
SearingTruth
A Future of the Brave - www.searingtruth.com
- 1
- 2
- next
See all 22 Comments